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Feds Bust Model Plane Terror Plot

Police arrest 26-year-old Massachusetts man for allegedly plotting to blow up the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol using a large radio-controlled aircraft, like the one shown left, and filling it with explosives.

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Delhi Cops Trained for UAV Threats

Delhi police is busy clearing the air. This after the Intelligence Bureau (IB) has received reports of probable attacks using Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) during the Commonwealth Games.

Sources say terrorist groups can use toy UAVs for attacks in high security zones where they can't enter. Such UAVs are able to carry significant amount of explosives, which can cause serious damage.

Last year, a child in Gurdwara Rakabganj was operating a toy chopper, that landed near the Parliament premises, exposing security loopholes. A top police official confirmed that they have trained the cops in a new format to tackle these threats.


Read more at Mid Day.

 

Mexican Drone Crashes

A Mexican drone crashed in El Paso's Lower Valley, sparking a federal investigation and raising questions about why the aircraft was in U.S. airspace.

"We are collecting data about the crash. We don't have the aircraft because it was returned to its owner," said Keith Holloway, spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates aircraft crashes in the United States and in other countries that request its help

 

Read more at the El Paso Times

 

UAV Shootdown

Raytheon successfully demonstrates its new sea-borne laser against an Exdrone aerial target.

 

 

Defending Against Drones

From Dr. Peter Singer of the The Brookings Institution for Newsweek.

"How our new favorite weapon in the war on terror could soon be turned against us.

The unmanned spy plane that Lebanon's Hizbullah sent buzzing over Israeli towns in 2005 was loud and weaponless, and carried only a rudimentary camera. But the surprise flight by a regional terror group still worried U.S. analysts, who saw it as a sign that the unmanned vehicles were falling into the wrong hands.

Today that concern appears to have been well founded. At least 40 other countries—from Belarus and Georgia to India, Pakistan, and Russia—have begun to build, buy, and deploy unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, showcasing their efforts at international weapons expos ranging from the premier Paris Air Show to smaller events in Singapore and Bahrain. In the last six months alone, Iran has begun production on a pair of weapons-ready surveillance drones, while China has debuted the Pterodactyl and Sour Dragon, rivals to America's Predator and Global Hawk. All told, two thirds of worldwide investment in unmanned planes in 2010 will be spent by countries other than the United States."

Newsweek Article

 


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